Haunting Sounds of The World's Largest Living Thing Revealed
We can now hear one of the largest and most ancient living organisms on Earth whisper with the tremble of a million leaves echoing through its roots.
The forest made of a single tree known as Pando ("I spread" in Latin) has 47,000 stems (all with the same DNA) sprouting from a shared root system over 100 acres (40 hectares) of Utah.
Here, this lone male quaking aspen (Populus tremuloides) gradually grew into a massive 6,000 metric tons of life, making it the largest living organism in the world in terms of mass.
After possibly 12,000 years of life on Earth, this massive plant, whose tree-like stems tower up to 24 meters (80 feet), surely has plenty to say. And recent recordings let us 'hear' it like never before.
"The findings are tantalizing," Lance Oditt, founder of Friends of Pando, said when the project was unveiled in 2023.
"While it started as art, we see enormous potential for use in science. Wind, converted to vibration (sound) and traveling the root system, could also reveal the inner workings of Pando's vast hidden hydraulic system in a non-destructive manner."
Sound artist Jeff Rice experimentally placed a hydrophone inside a hollow at the base of a branch and threaded it down to the tree's roots, not expecting to hear much.
"Hydrophones don't just need water to work," Rice said. "They can pick up vibrations from surfaces like roots as well, and when I put on my headphones, I was instantly surprised. Something was happening. There was a faint sound."
Amid a thunderstorm, that sound increased – the device captured an eerie low rumbling.
"What you're hearing, I think, is the sound of millions of leaves in the forest, vibrating the tree and passing down through the branches, down into the earth," Rice explained when he presented his recordings to the 184th Meeting of the Acoustical Society of America.
The hydrophone also captured the thumps from tapping on a branch 90 feet away, even though that sound was not audible through the air at that distance. This supports the theory that Pando's root system is interconnected, but a proper experimental setup would be required to confirm the sound wasn't traveling through the soil.
Such shared root systems are common in colonial quaking aspens, but the size and age of Pando make it unique. While quaking aspens can reproduce through seeds, they seldom grow from them as pollination is rare since large aspen stands are usually only one sex, being clones of the same individual.
Friends of Pando invited Rice as an artist in residence to try and better understand this strange, enormous entity. Oditt hopes to use sound to map Pando's tangle of roots.
"The sounds are beautiful and interesting, but from a practical standpoint, natural sounds can be used to document the health of an environment," said Rice. "They are a record of the local biodiversity, and they provide a baseline that can be measured against environmental change."
Rice also recorded Pando's leaves, bark, and the surrounding ecosystem.
"Friends of Pando plans to use the data gathered as the basis for additional studies on water movement, how branch arrays are related to one another, insect colonies, and root depth, all of which we know little about today," said Oditt.
Sadly, this magnificent tree is deteriorating, leaving researchers concerned that Pando's days and all the forest life it supports are numbered. Human activities, including clearing and slaughtering predators that keep down herbivore numbers, eat away at this ancient being.
All the more reason to listen to 'The Trembling Giant' while it can still share its secrets.
An earlier version of this article was published in May 2023.
Scientists Found The 'Lid' Keeping The Yellowstone Supervolcano From Erupting
Sausage Dog Rescued After Surviving Solo For 529 Days on Remote Island
The Modern Cat May Have Emerged From Ancient Egyptian Ritual Sacrifice
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Miami Herald
11 hours ago
- Miami Herald
Colorful sea creatures with ‘spectacular' blue fins turn out to be new species
Swimming through the crystal blue waters surrounding the Galapagos Islands, divers watched the hubbub of life on the coral reef. A 'large,' colorful sea creature with 'spectacular' blue fins caught their attention. The 'painted' animal had been misidentified for over 180 years — until now. When Charles Darwin visited the Galapagos Islands off the coast of Ecuador in 1835, he collected several fish with wing-like fins later described as a new species of sea robin. Ever since, scientists 'generally assumed that all' of the islands' sea robins were the ones Darwin found, Benjamin Victor wrote in a study published June 5 in the peer-reviewed Journal of the Ocean Science Foundation. But that changed when Victor and other researchers with the East Pacific Corridor Alliance started analyzing the DNA of these colorful fish. The 'surprising' result suggested Darwin's sea robins were being lumped together with other genetically distinct sea robins. Stunned, the team started combing the archives, sought out new specimens and took a closer look at fish guidebooks for the Galapagos Islands. They realized 'that among the more than 100 underwater photographs of sea robins taken in the archipelago, all but a handful are not the species collected by Darwin, but a different-looking species.' The team had accidentally discovered a new species: Prionotus pictus, or the painted sea robin. Painted sea robins are considered 'large,' reaching almost 8 inches in length, the study said. They have 'stout' and 'elongate' bodies. Their 'large' heads have a 'sharply rising, duck-billed' snout, 'protruding' eyes and a 'small' mouth with a teeth-covered tongue. The new species has 'a variety of colorful and contrasting patterns,' Victor wrote. 'A common color palette is basic brown with bright orange tints' and side fins with a 'thick bright-blue' edge, which look 'spectacular when fanned out.' Other painted sea robins have 'bright red and orange' bodies or 'washed-out tan or pale' hues or a 'mostly black-and-white' pattern, the study said. Still, all painted sea robins have white markings on their heads and bodies 'in a unique individual pattern (like a fingerprint),' the study said. Victor said he named the new species after the Latin word for 'painted' because of these patterns, colors and 'white markings as if splashed with paint.' So far, painted sea robins have only been found in the Galapagos Islands, an archipelago off the western coast of Ecuador, the study said. The fish live in rocky areas, reefs and 'sandy patches' and are often seen by scuba divers. In an over 180-year-long case of mistaken identity, 'photo guidebooks and most divers mistook (the new species of sea robin) for Darwin's species,' Victor wrote. 'Thus, a large, conspicuous, and relatively common new species of fish, endemic (native) to the Galapagos Archipelago, has eluded recognition until now.' The new species was identified by its DNA, fin shape, head and snout shape, color pattern, lips, head spines and other subtle physical features, the study said.


Miami Herald
a day ago
- Miami Herald
Five-armed creature — covered in ‘axes' — found off Taiwan. See the new species
In the rocky intertidal zones along the coast of Taiwan, a five-armed creature scuttles along the seafloor. Its brown, green and black body blends in with the colorful rocks as it glides across the bottom. The animal is a brittle star — and a new species. Brittle stars, or ophiurida, may look like classic starfish, but their long and flexible arms set them apart from their more rigid cousins. They can move quickly thanks to muscles that move a series of vertebrae-like structures linked together with ball-and-socket joints, according to the University of California at Berkeley. The new brittle star was collected off the southern coast of Taiwan and around a few barrier islands, according to a study published June 6 in the peer-reviewed European Journal of Taxonomy. The animal's central structure, or dorsal disc, is 'covered with fine granules,' according to the study, while the arms are covered in spines. The long arms are made up of spiny plates that fit together like puzzle pieces, photos show. The pattern on the arms also gives the new species its name, researchers said. Breviturma securis, or the axe brittle star, derives its name from the Latin word 'securis' meaning axe, 'referencing the axe-shaped dark patterns on the dorsal arm plates,' according to the study. The body as a whole is 'yellowish-gray to greenish-gray' with 'lighter and darker patches,' researchers said. 'These regions are adorned with discontinuous short dark lines that never form a reticular pattern,' according to the study. 'In juveniles, a dark 'star' may occasionally appear at the center of the disc but never connects to the arm base.' The brittle stars live in the sandy material below rocks from intertidal zones to shallow waters around 25 feet deep, researchers said. They are also commonly found in the same areas as other related brittle star species. Breviturma securis was previously misidentified as another species and appeared in a series of field guides and photographs under the wrong name, according to the study. The new research, with DNA confirmation, will allow these resources to be updated, researchers said. The holotype, or primary specimen used to describe the new species, was found in Taitung County on Taiwan's southeastern coast. The research team includes Kai Chang and Hsi-Te Shih.
Yahoo
a day ago
- Yahoo
How do clouds get their shapes?
Take a look at the sky on any given day and you'll likely see clouds of different shapes — some look like cotton balls, others are fine and feathery or tall and imposing. But what gives a cloud its distinct appearance? The answer lies in a mix of factors. To understand how clouds get their shape, it helps to understand the basics of how they form. When air rises and cools, the water vapor it holds condenses into tiny water droplets or ice crystals. If enough of these particles cluster together, a visible cloud forms. Scientists typically classify clouds into ten main types, based on their shape and how high they appear in the sky. For instance, cumulus clouds (from the Latin for 'heap') resemble a pile of cotton balls, while stratus clouds (meaning 'layer') stretch out like blankets and cirrus clouds (Latin for 'hair') look feather-like. These root names can be combined to describe more complex cloud types—like cirrocumulus. The prefix 'alto' (meaning 'high') helps distinguish mid-level clouds from their lower-level counterparts (such as altostratus vs stratus). The distance of a cloud from the Earth has a big influence on its appearance. Air temperatures decrease with altitude, so clouds that form closer to earth are made mostly of water droplets, while higher clouds tend to be composed of ice crystals. Mid-level clouds often contain a mix of both. This difference in composition influences how clouds look: water-based clouds, like cumulus, have crisp edges and a solid appearance, while icy clouds, such as cirrus, are usually more transparent and diffuse. Air movement also affects cloud shapes. As warm, moist air rises—a process known as convection—it cools and condenses, forming clouds. But something interesting happens in the process: as water vapor condenses, it releases heat, which warms the surrounding air. The warmer air becomes less dense than the surrounding cooler air, making it more buoyant. This increased buoyancy causes the air parcel to rise even faster. 'These upward currents are associated with billows, giving the cumuliform clouds that many of us picture when we think of clouds,' Bjorn Stevens, a climate scientist and managing director of the Max Planck Institute for Meteorology in Hamburg, Germany, told Popular Science. If the air is warm and humid near the Earth's surface but much colder higher up, a fair-weather cumulus cloud can quickly grow into a towering cumulonimbus—the kind that brings thunderstorms. Cirrus clouds, known for their wispy, feathery appearance, are shaped by strong winds high in the atmosphere. These winds act on the ice crystals that make up cirrus clouds, twisting and spreading them into delicate strands. 'The shape also depends very much on the light,' adds Stevens. He explains that clouds are a 'dispersion,' meaning that they're made up of countless particles suspended in air—more like fog than a solid object. 'They don't have a clear end or beginning,' he says. What we perceive as a cloud's edge is actually where sunlight scatters off the droplets or ice crystals within. Sometimes this scattering happens near the cloud's surface, while other times it comes from deeper within the mist, which is why cloud boundaries often seem vague or ever-shifting. The physical features of an area, or the 'topography,' can also influence the shape of clouds. In an article published on The Conversation, Ross Lazear, an instructor in Atmospheric and Environmental Sciences at the University at Albany, State University of New York, explained how air flowing over mountain ranges sets off atmospheric ripples, much like a rock disrupting water in a stream, and leads to the formation of lenticular clouds, which resemble flying saucers. Each cloud is shaped a certain way for a reason. For meteorologists, those shapes aren't just fascinating—they're valuable clues for forecasting what weather is coming next. his story is part of Popular Science's Ask Us Anything series, where we answer your most outlandish, mind-burning questions, from the ordinary to the off-the-wall. Have something you've always wanted to know? Ask us.